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Saturday, 5 February 2011

Out with the Tiger, in with the Rabbit


THINK ASIAN BY ANDREW SHENG

As the Year of the Tiger fades, it has been a year of drama and change. The last Year of the Tiger was 1998, an unforgettable year for the Asian financial crisis. As the Tiger year fades, there has been regime change in Tunisia and big demonstrations for change in Egypt. The Year of the Wood Rabbit in a metal year means that some of the Tiger volatility might remain. Surprisingly, from the perspective of investors, 2010 was quite a year of recovery, thanks to Uncle Ben and his printing machine.

I will not try to predict the future, but will use the Chinese New Year to reflect on an important publication that reviews the lessons of the last three years of crisis. We need to study the past to understand the future.

On Jan 27, 2011, after 18 months of hard work, the US Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission (FCIC) report was finally published, a 633-page document with more appendices to be published soon. This is an important historical document, because it was based on comprehensive evidence called by the commission on almost all the major players in the crisis. Mark my words, the facts are more astonishing than fiction.

The majority view of the report listed the usual suspects: the crisis was due to human faults, with widespread failures in financial regulation and supervision; failures of corporate governance and risk management at systemically important financial institutions; excessive borrowing, risky investments, lack of transparency put system at risk; the government was ill-prepared to manage crisis and systemic breakdown in accountability and ethics. The trigger to the crisis was bad mortgage-lending standards and securitisation; and contributors were over-the-counter derivatives and rating agency failures.

This official document is elegantly written, richly filled with quotes from the insightful to the four-letter direct utterances. It rightly seeks to “expose the facts, identify responsibility, unravel myths, and help us understand how the crisis could have been avoided.”

Despite some who tried to argue that no one could have foreseen or prevented the crisis, the report argued that “The crisis was the result of human action and inaction, not of Mother Nature or computer models gone haywire. The captains of finance and the public stewards of our financial system ignored warnings and failed to question, understand, and manage evolving risks within a system essential to the well-being of the American public. Theirs was a big miss, not a stumble.”

Even though the report commended the principal actors in doing their best to manage an incredibly complex crisis, the report did “not accept the view that regulators lacked the power to protect the financial system. They had ample power in many arenas and they chose not to use it. To give just three examples: the Securities and Exchange Commission could have required more capital and halted risky practices at the big investment banks. It did not. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York and other regulators could have clamped down on Citigroup's excesses in the run-up to the crisis. They did not. Policymakers and regulators could have stopped the runaway mortgage securitisation train. They did not.”

Why did these regulators not act? “Too often, they lacked the political will in a political and ideological environment that constrained it as well as the fortitude to critically challenge the institutions and the entire system they were entrusted to oversee.”

Unfortunately, the report was split along partisan lines. The three dissenting Republican Party FCIC Commission members considered the report as too broad and rejected as too simplistic a view that too little regulation caused the crisis.

On the contrary, they took the view that too much regulation might have been a cause. They pointed out that the report ignored the global nature of the current financial crisis and argued that the causes should look beyond the housing to the credit and other bubbles.

Another lone dissenter, Peter Wallison of the American Enterprise Institute, identified US government housing policies as the major contributor to the financial crisis.

The complexity of the current financial crisis and its causes will give rise to more debates in the years to come. The majority view of the report was correct in identifying that the crisis was avoidable. However, the dissenters were also correct in identifying that the majority view was partial, by not putting the crisis in its global context.

Indeed, I feel that a serious omission of the report was not to point out that mainstream economic theory failed to provide a holistic and systemic-wide view of the financial system and its vulnerability to crisis, instead inculcating policymakers and regulators to focus on partial analysis and silo-based views that inevitably missed the big picture and the relevant details.

In the 2010 and 2011 Annual Meetings of the American Economic Association, the economics profession is finally beginning to address its own deficiencies and also its own ethics.

Former Obama presidential economic adviser Larry Summer had the most graphic quote on the causes and trigger of the crisis. He likened the financial crisis to a forest fire and the mortgage meltdown to a “cigarette butt” thrown into a very dry forest. Was the cigarette butt, he asked, the cause of the forest fire, or was it the tinder dry condition of the forest?

The real question is who was supposed to look after the forest in the first place?

Now that we know who is responsible for the financial crisis, how is it that no one seems to be accountable for what went wrong?

The Tiger has roared. Now we want to see if the response is that of a Rabbit. Kung Hei Fat Choy to all readers.

>Andrew Sheng is the author of From Asian to Global Financial Crisis.

Friday, 4 February 2011

U.S. wireless subscribers overpay on service

by Marguerite Reardon



The average U.S. wireless subscriber is overpaying on his or her cell phone bill by $336 a year, according to a study by BillShrink, a search engine designed to help people find the best service deals to meet their needs.

About 80 percent of U.S. wireless subscribers miscalculate how many anytime voice minutes, text messages, and megabytes of data they need, BillShrink found. As a result, consumers are purchasing wireless plans that don't fit their needs and are actually costing them more money. Collectively, this results in the wireless industry pulling in an extra $79 million for services consumers don't actually need or use.

"It's interesting to see what people estimate their usage to be and what they actually use," said Schwark Satyavolu, co-founder and CEO of BillShrink. "Despite the best efforts from the FCC and the carriers to create transparency in wireless fees, we've found that people are becoming even more confused about how to right-size their cell phone plans."

BillShrink offers a tool on its Web site that analyzes people's cell phone bills to find the best plan to fit each customer's needs. Satyavolu says that while new tiered service offerings give consumers more choice, finding the plan that fits individual usage patterns can be tricky.

The company analyzed data from more than 230,000 individual bills that had been submitted through its service from December 2009 to December 2010. BillShrink compared actual wireless usage from these cell phone bills versus people's estimated cell phone use to reveal some key findings.

First, when it comes to voice minutes and text messaging, consumers tend to overestimate how much they need. Satyavolu said the average consumer thinks he or she needs about 711 voice minutes per month but in reality uses only about 651 minutes. The average consumer also estimates he or she needs about 2,566 text messages but actually sends only about 1,555 messages per month.

Right-sizing a voice plan is especially tricky, since anytime voice minutes don't mean the same thing to every carrier. For example, some carriers don't count calls made to other cell phone users on their same network, or they may allow subscribers to designate certain friends' or family members' numbers part of a special calling circle, which also may not count against anytime minutes. And still, many carriers don't start their free nights and weekends at the same times.

"You can't just buy the same number of minutes and text messages on one carrier and expect to have the same usage on another carrier," Satyavolu said. "They all count the anytime minutes differently."

Meanwhile, consumers tend to underestimate how much mobile data they use. The average consumer thinks he or she uses about 54MB of data per month but actually uses about 81MB of data. Even though consumers are underestimating how much data they use, they're still using far less than what they're paying for.

Today, three of the four major U.S. wireless operators offer tiered data plans. Verizon Wireless started offering a promotional data plan in October that includes 150MB of data for $15 a month. It ended the promotion last month. And now only offers smartphone customers the option of a $30 unlimited data plan.

AT&T offers a 200MB plan for $15 a month. And T-Mobile USA just recently introduced a 200MB plan for $10 a month.

Even though data usage among U.S. wireless consumers has increased by about 94 percent from December 2009 to December 2010, according to BillShrink, the average wireless subscriber in the U.S. is still far below the cap offered in the lowest tier of cell phone service. What's ironic is that many consumers still believe they need an unlimited data plan.

"I'd say that 150MB to 200MB of data per month is plenty more than most wireless consumers actually need," Satyavolu said. "But if you read the blogs, you'd think the move toward tiered data plans is the end of the world. The reality is that it's a small fraction of people who really benefit from unlimited plans."
Marguerite Reardon
Full Profile E-mail Marguerite Reardon

Marguerite Reardon has been a CNET News reporter since 2004, covering cell phone services, broadband, citywide Wi-Fi, the Net neutrality debate, as well as the ongoing consolidation of the phone companies.

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Thursday, 3 February 2011

U.S. defended Egyptian activist's YouTube videos

By Declan McCullagh



U.S. State Department officials successfully pressured Google to restore a YouTube video showing torture and murder by Egypt's state police, a WikiLeaks cable reveals.

The Cairo embassy and the State Department's bureau of democracy, human rights, and labor "worked to convince Google to restore" a prominent blogger's account that was suspended in late 2007, the recently released cable says.

Nearly a year later, the same blogger contacted the State Department to report that "YouTube removed from his website two videos exposing police abuses," including a woman being tortured at a police station and Sinai Bedouin allegedly shot by police and thrown in a garbage dump.

The cable doesn't reveal the blogger's name, but it appears to be Wael Abbas, who disclosed at the time that his YouTube channel was suspended due to complaints and the videos he uploaded replaced with this message: "This video has been removed due to terms of use violation."

There was no evidence that Google's decision was prompted by President Hosni Mubarak's state security apparatus. Rather, Abbas encountered a more prosaic obstacle: YouTube's terms of service and community guidelines, which prohibit "graphic" violence. The guidelines say "if a video is particularly graphic or disturbing, it should be balanced with additional context and information."

YouTube said in a statement at the time that Abbas could re-upload the videos if he added that context: "In this case, our general policy against graphic violence led to the removal of videos documenting alleged human rights abuses because the context was not apparent...(If Abbas chooses to) upload the video again with sufficient context so that users can understand his important message we will of course leave it on the site."

Abbas, a democracy and anti-torture activist, was subsequently targeted by state security and was convicted last year of "providing a telecommunications service to the public without permission." The International Center for Journalists presented him with the Knight International Journalism Award. Videos on his now-restored YouTube channel have received nearly 44 million views.

The State Department dispatch doesn't say what Google employees were involved in the discussions with Google, but one not-fully-redacted line mentions the name "Pablo." Pablo Chavez is a senior policy counsel in Washington, D.C. who works on topics including censorship and free speech.

Google representatives did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Disclosure: McCullagh is married to a Google employee not involved with this issue
 
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Arab marching to the beat of their own drums

DIPLOMATICALLY SPEAKING By DENNIS IGNATIUS duta.thestar@gmail.com

Arab citizens now marching to the beat of their own drums

 


THE mass demonstrations that continue to rock the Middle East are not just a threat to the region’s entrenched despots — they represent an unravelling of the American imperium no less.

Some long-held assumptions about the political inclinations of Arab citizens are also being challenged.

Over the last 60 years, the United States and its Western allies progressively advanced their dominion over much of the Middle East by deposing unfriendly or uncooperative regimes and propping up friendly governments through political and military alliances.

What evolved was a system of local satraps who were deeply unpopular with their own people but supportive of America’s broader regional objectives — control over the region’s oil wealth, protecting Israel’s security and containing radical Islam.

Lost in the midst of this grand strategy were both the interests of the people themselves and the very principles of democracy that once earned America admiration and respect in the developing world.

The grand failure of American diplomacy was that it never found a way to reconcile its own strategic interests in the region with the hopes and aspirations of Arab citizens.

Particularly after Islamists won elections first in Algeria and then in Gaza, it chose to put its faith in a few ruthless dictators instead of genuinely working to empower civil society and developing strong national institutions.

It was a case of security and stability trumping democracy and development. Many, both local and foreign, warned that such a strategy was unsustainable but hubris overwhelmed wisdom, especially during the Bush years.

Now that the day of reckoning has arrived, Western governments are rushing to find common cause with the Arab street.

France, Switzerland and Italy, for example, quickly closed their doors to deposed Tunisian dictator Ben Ali and his family and froze their assets. Canada is presently seeking to evict Ben Ali’s family members though it was happy to give them permanent residence when they ruled Tunisia.

As the shouts for “hurriyya” or liberty grew louder on the streets of Egypt, Western capitals gushed with sudden admiration for its citizens. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton unabashedly said that America had been on the side of Egyptians for the past 30 years!

How hollow and shallow all this must sound to Arab citizens.

They may be poor and oppressed but they are not stupid. They know who stood with their oppressors all these years. They know it’s easy to kick a despot when he’s down but it takes real conviction to stand up to one when he’s at the height of his power.

Despite this, there has been a remarkable absence of anti-American or anti-Western rancour on the streets of Arab cities. Thus far at least, there are no chants of “death to America.”

On the contrary, Arab citizens appear to be generally looking to the West for support and sympathy. What they want is not more pious platitudes but unequivocal support, pressure on the security forces not to resort to violence and a firm commitment to real and meaningful democratic change.

Of course, there is always the possibility that Islamic radicals might come out of the shadows and seize power as they did in Iran after the Shah was toppled. Iran’s mullahs are certainly wishing for this, forgetting that there is a restlessness for change on their own streets, as witnessed last year following flawed presidential elections there.

The last thing the Arab world needs, after decades of oppression by secular despots, is yet more oppression by religious zealots. They need to move forward into modernity, not backward into past mirages. But this is something that Arab citizens themselves will have to grapple with.

The sooner strong democratic institutions — a free press, an impartial judiciary, a transparent, accountable and responsive governance system — are established, the better they will be able to resist both forms of tyranny.

For now, it must certainly speak volumes about their politics that the cry for what the American Declaration of Independence so eloquently called “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” united, galvanised and energised the Arab street to a degree that Osama bin Laden and his ilk can only envy.

Change has come not in response to Obama or Osama but in response to their own yearning for freedom and dignity.

America and the West must now support an orderly transition by taking a clear stand. Once Arab citizens are convinced that the West is committed to genuine change, they are more likely to be trusting, for example, of an interim administration in Egypt, pending free and fair elections.

What is also urgently needed is a bold and visionary development agenda, a new Marshall Plan even, that will help transform the Middle East into a dynamic region of growth and prosperity. It is the only way to ensure lasting stability in this important region. It will be a lot cheaper than another war.

Whatever happens, Arab citizens now see themselves differently. They are sending a clear message that they will not allow Western priorities to take precedence over their own hopes and aspirations for a better future. They are marching to the beat of their own drums and there is no going back to the days of the American imperium.

Wednesday, 2 February 2011

Malaysian mind change



In the short run, the old policy of  "divide and rule" may succeed but the future lies with the new forces.

TO the social observer, subtle changes are taking place in society. I refer to the opening of the Malaysian mind.

This is a relatively new phenomenon, but an important one with significant ramifications for the socio-economic-political future of the country.

On one hand, there is the closing of the Malaysian mind that is oblivious to the changing world and its consequences for the country.

These are the reactionary forces who are unable to understand the global forces at work. They continue to live in the past, buttressed by archaic structures and outmoded forces.

They believe they can retain the past and enjoy their privileges. These forces are still strong and wield much power, taking advantage of ignorance and divisions within society.

They seemingly champion changes but in reality, manipulate the system to maintain the status quo. It is important to recognise this group for what they are, lest we are taken in by their rhetorics.

The exciting development is not the closing of the Malaysian mind but its opening, which offers tremendous potential for the future growth and direction of the country.

We see a new thinking taking shape among Malaysians that cuts across race, religion and rural-urban divide. This is a growing group, mostly young but not solely.

They have an open mind to religious freedom, transparency, equal opportunity, competition, authority and personal freedom. They represent a breath of fresh air. Admittedly, their number is small but growing.

Paradoxically, it is the past policies and initiatives of the Barisan government that have laid the foundation for the emergence of this new social change.

The change is led not by the elite that is heavily beholden to vested interests and have lost the capacity to provide objective leadership.

Neither is the change coming from the academic corridors. Sadly, academics have become partisan and have compromised their independence to lead change.

The public bureaucracy, too, has lost its neutrality to initiate meaningful changes. Many of the civil society organisations have also become aligned to interest groups.

Interestingly, the change is coming from ordinary people in the streets and coffeeshops with common sense, decency and innocence. Because they have not been spoilt by power, money and position, they are able to see the changes necessary to shape the future of Malaysia.

These are the people, for example, who see the importance of an English education for their children and the broader issues in religion, culture, race and public accountability.

They are politically streetwise and see the trees for the forest. They are becoming hard to be manipulated by the elite through promises of goodies. This is not people power but street wisdom.

As this group grows in size and reaches a critical mass, we will see a gradual change in the politics of the country for the better.

The old and the new emerging forces are at loggerheads. One stands for real change and the other for pseudo change.

The new forces are genuine, cut across race and are global.

They see a Malaysia losing out to the region and the world unless there is real economic, social and political change.

Irrespective of who wants to govern Malaysia, the secret to success lies in how one manages the new social forces.

In the short run, the old policy of divide and rule may succeed but the future lies with the new forces.

The political leaders of both camps seem to be unable to understand the implications of the new emerging forces.

One thing is clear though, the opening of the Malaysian mind is a welcome change and augurs well for the country. Also, it is a force that cannot be contained or suppressed for too long. It can only grow with time.

Will our leaders rise to the occasion and harvest the forces of change for the sake of the country or will they continue to indulge in manipulation and rhetoric for political interest?

Dr I. LOURDESAMY,
Petaling Jaya.

US at a loss to deal with new Middle East intifada

By Eric S. Margolis





ARE we looking at a Middle East version of the 1989 uprisings across Eastern Europe that brought down its Communist regimes and the Soviet Union?  

There are certainly strong similarities between the old Soviet East Bloc and the spreading intifada across America’s Middle East Raj. Corrupt, repressive governments; rapacious oligarchies; high youth unemployment and stagnation; widespread feelings of frustration, hopelessness and fury.

But there is also a big difference. The principled Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev, and the Communist rulers of Eastern Europe, refused to turn their army’s guns against the rebelling people.

In Tunisia, where the Arab uprising began, the army has so far stayed admirably neutral. But in other Arab states now seething with rebellion – Egypt, Algeria, Yemen, Morocco, Libya – there may be no such reservations. Their ruthless security forces and military could quickly crush the uprisings unless the soldiers refuse to shoot down their own people – as happened in Moscow in 1991.

Washington is watching this growing intifada in its Middle East Raj with alarm and confusion. Ignore the Obama administration’s hypocritical platitudes about Middle East "democracy". All of the authoritarian Arab rulers now under siege by their people have been armed, financed and supported for decades by the US. Only in the Arab Gulf oil states is there real stability and genuine government concern for citizens’ welfare.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urges "restraint" on both sides. One supposes she means those being beaten by clubs, or tortured by electric drills must show proper restraint. Egypt, as this column has long said, is a ticking bomb. Half of 85 million Egyptians subsist below the UN’s US$2 daily poverty level.

Hosni Mubarak has ruled Egypt with an iron fist since 1981. All opposition to his regime has been crushed. But now Mubarak’s time may be running out. Nobel-prize laureate Mohammed al-Baradei has returned to Egypt to challenge Mubarak and his designated successor, son, Gamal. Arab league chief Amr Moussa may also move against Mubarak.

Washington has previously lauded Mubarak for "wise leadership" and "stability". The US pays Egypt over US$2 billion annually not to confront Israel, to jail Islamists, and to keep Hamas in the open air prison of Gaza. The US Congress provides half of Egypt’s food. Since Israel effectively controls the US Congress, Israel exercises extraordinary influence over Egypt.

So far, none of the intifadas across the Arab world have produced effective leadership. But this could soon change.

Now, thanks to the bombshell "Palestinian Papers" leaked to Al-Jazeera, Mahmoud Abbas’s Palestinian Authority has been exposed as an eager collaborator with Israel and its West Bank occupation. The endless Israeli-Palestinian "peace talks" are shown to be a total fraud. Israel’s Mossad and its Palestinian Quislings have worked closely to destroy the democratically elected Hamas government in Gaza.

We also learn from these papers that in 2008, US Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice proposed shipping millions of Palestinian refugees to Latin America. This after Israel, financed by the US, imported one million Russian settlers, many of them not even Jewish. One is reminded of British proposals in the 1930’s to move Germany’s endangered Jews to Kenya.

This was Washington’s modern version of US-taxpayer financed ethnic cleansing of Muslims and Christians.
The "Palestinian Papers" and Wikileaks show the US government often indistinguishable from Israel, and at all times taking Israel’s side. So much for being an honest-broker.

The US-Israeli backed Palestinian Authority has lost its last shreds of credibility. This news will surely fan the flames spreading across the Arab and greater Muslim world as their peoples realise the full extent of the betrayal of the Palestinians.

These dramatic events are poorly understood by most North Americans. The US and Canadian media frame news of the regional intifada in terms of the so-called war on terror, and a false choice between dictatorial "stability" and Islamic political extremism. Much of what’s happening is seen through Israel’s eyes, and is badly distorted.

Platitudes aside, there is little concern in the US about bringing real democracy and modern society in the Arab world. Washington wants obedience, not pluralism, in its Middle East Raj. As with the British Empire, democracy at home is fine but it’s not right for the nations of the Arab world.

Eric S. Margolis is an award-winning, internationally syndicated columnist, writing mainly about the Middle East and South Asia. Comments: letters@thesundaily.com




Tuesday, 1 February 2011

TM & NTT Com to Construct Submarine Cable System Worth RM427mil



Telekom Malaysia (TM) has teamed up with Japan's NTT Communications (NTT Com) to build a new US$140 million (RM427 million) international submarine cable system to enhance Internet protocol communications in the region.

TM's Group Chief Executive Officer, Datuk Seri Zamzamzairani Mohd Isa said the submarine cable system will have six fiber pairs to be developed at a cost of US$412 million.

He said TM will own two pairs named Cahaya Malaysia which will span a distance of 7,000 kilometers and link Malaysia to Hong Kong and Japan utilizing dense wavelength division multiplexing technology (DWDM).

"NTT Com will own the remaining four fiber pairs which they plan to develop with other regional carriers to provide landing points in the Philippines and Singapore," he told reporters after the signing of an agreement here today.

The signing ceremony was witnessed by Minister of Information, Communications and Culture Datuk Seri Utama Dr Rais Yatim.     

Zamzamzairani said the project funded internally by the company, would enable TM to improve latency connectivity by 25 percent.

"Phase one of the cable system linking Malaysia to Japan will be completed by the middle of 2012, while phase two linking Malaysia to Hong Kong is expected to be completed by the end of 2012."

Zamzamzairani said the cable system is the first in the region based on 40 gigabits per second (Gbps) DWDM technology with a design capacity of 15 terabyte per second.

He said the cable system will be capable of supporting the upcoming 100Gbps DWDM technology which will effectively raise its capacity to several times its initial capacity.

"This cable system will also provide an alternative, diverse routing within the Asia-Pacific region to avoid areas prone to seismic activities which are hazardous to undersea cables," he said.

Currently, TM owns or leases capacity on more than 10 submarine cable systems, which span more than 60,000 fiber routes miles around the globe, including several submarine cable routes that it uses to carry traffic between the Asia-Pacific region and North America.


- Bernama